Lability of prenatal stress during the COVID‐19 pandemic links to negative affect in infancy


Journal article


Leigha A. MacNeill, S. Krogh-Jespersen, Yudong Zhang, Gina Giase, R. Edwards, A. Petitclerc, Leena B. Mithal, K. Mestan, W. Grobman, E. Norton, N. Alshurafa, J. Moskowitz, S. D. Tandon, L. Wakschlag
Infancy, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
MacNeill, L. A., Krogh-Jespersen, S., Zhang, Y., Giase, G., Edwards, R., Petitclerc, A., … Wakschlag, L. (2022). Lability of prenatal stress during the COVID‐19 pandemic links to negative affect in infancy. Infancy.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
MacNeill, Leigha A., S. Krogh-Jespersen, Yudong Zhang, Gina Giase, R. Edwards, A. Petitclerc, Leena B. Mithal, et al. “Lability of Prenatal Stress during the COVID‐19 Pandemic Links to Negative Affect in Infancy.” Infancy (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
MacNeill, Leigha A., et al. “Lability of Prenatal Stress during the COVID‐19 Pandemic Links to Negative Affect in Infancy.” Infancy, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{leigha2022a,
  title = {Lability of prenatal stress during the COVID‐19 pandemic links to negative affect in infancy},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Infancy},
  author = {MacNeill, Leigha A. and Krogh-Jespersen, S. and Zhang, Yudong and Giase, Gina and Edwards, R. and Petitclerc, A. and Mithal, Leena B. and Mestan, K. and Grobman, W. and Norton, E. and Alshurafa, N. and Moskowitz, J. and Tandon, S. D. and Wakschlag, L.}
}

Abstract

Abstract The association between prenatal stress and children's socioemotional development is well established. The COVID‐19 pandemic has been a particularly stressful period, which may impact the gestational environment. However, most studies to‐date have examined prenatal stress at a single time point, potentially masking the natural variation in stress that occurs over time, especially during a time as uncertain as the pandemic. This study leveraged dense ecological momentary assessments from a prenatal randomized control trial to examine patterns of prenatal stress over a 14‐week period (up to four assessments/day) in a U.S. sample of 72 mothers and infants. We first examined whether varied features of stress exposure (lability, mean, and baseline stress) differed depending on whether mothers reported on their stress before or during the pandemic. We next examined which features of stress were associated with 3‐month‐old infants' negative affect. We did not find differences in stress patterns before and during the pandemic. However, greater stress lability, accounting for baseline and mean stress, was associated with higher infant negative affect. These findings suggest that pathways from prenatal stress exposure to infant socioemotional development are complex, and close attention to stress patterns over time will be important for explicating these pathways.


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